Embedded SurveyMonkey survey not appearing on mobile - mobile

I'm looking to embed an existing survey monkey survey into a webpage, following the instructions here:
http://help.surveymonkey.com/articles/en_US/kb/Website-Collector
which is working perfectly on desktop and tablet sizes, but for some reason not working on mobile (either on an android device or in chrome emulator)
The following steps appear to be working:
Loading embed script into the page
Embed script calls surveymonkey.com, and retrieves the SMCX script
SMCX.boot() is called
But, the survey (or its markup) does not appear in the page.
Has anyone else run into this issue? What other additional information can I provide?

The Website Collector used to work everywhere, but they changed their API and now document that mobile is not supported.
http://help.surveymonkey.com/articles/en_US/kb/Website-Collector
"Website Collectors display on desktop browsers only—not on mobile devices or tablets."
It's actually worse than not supporting mobile or tablets, their surveys don't even load on desktop browsers if your browser is currently 760 pixels or less wide.
The solution is to just iframe the web link in manually.
<iframe height="500" width="500" src="https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/XL3DDMS"></iframe>

In addition to the answer of using iframe, for iPhone, both in Safari and Chrome rendered a weird view (the spacing between each question is extremely large), and I finally tackled it by turn off the "One Question at a Time" option, hope this helps someone.

Related

Google amp html validator doesn't see mobile page

I am working on a news website, trying to implement amp. We are using Mobile_Detect.php to serve desktop pages to desktop and tablets, and mobile version to mobile phones and that works OK, our pages are mobile friendly according to Google for some time now, no problem.
Now, I started to enter the code for amp pages and encountered a situation I can' resolve. URL for the amp version have .amp at the end. Depending on the user's device, we are generating the page from the database and serving different pages to different devices.
Now, PageSpeed Insights and Mobile-Friendly Test shows that the page is mobile friendly but amp validator is pulling the desktop page, I can see by the source code it prints out, instead of a mobile page. I'm on the desktop, Chrome, but I'd expect it to work with mobile pages.
You can see that here: https://validator.ampproject.org/#url=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.poandpo.com%2Fbusineasdfasdfas-usual%2Fpublic-housadfadf-kong-972016223.amp
I installed Chrome amp extension and it says "AMP available" but when I click on it it also pulls the desktop version of the page and it's blank. I would expect the extension to load the mobile page but it doesn't.
We do have links canonical and amphtml, that's why the extension says there is an amp page.
So, how to tell validator to pull the mobile version of the page? The amp implementation is not done yet and I know there are some things missing, but without a validator is a bit hard to program.
Another interesting things is that when I open "Inspect" in Chrome and toggle to responsive design, it shows the mobile version of the webpage correctly. It also says "Powered by amp" and shows no errors although there are errors because we didn't even implemented all tags.
If anybody has any suggestion how to make amp validator to show the mobile page I'd appreciate that. Thank you.
I had a quick look at your pages but it appears that the amphtml reference but there appears to be a problem in the URL you are generating in the href= field. If you take a close look, the AMP URL is missing a '/'.
Broken: http://www.poandpo.com/business-as-usualmexicans-work-longest-hours-germans-the-least-97201645.amp
Works: http://www.poandpo.com/business-as-usual/mexicans-work-longest-hours-germans-the-least-97201645.amp

Rendering mobile simulated view inside image of mobile phone on desktop browser

I am relatively new to SO, and this is my first question so I hope I get the format & question information correct. I am looking for a plugin or tool that can assist me with a specific display issue.
I have a mobile application that is deployed to both Android and iOS devices. I also have a mobile web application that renders very much like the actual mobile application in the mobile device web browser when the user browses certain parts of the server back end cloud service website on their mobile device. So far so good.
However, when the user browses these parts of the cloud service website on a desktop/laptop, they get the web application view - some of it stretched and not ideally optimised as this is really for viewing on mobile devices. The client would like that a user, on desktop/laptop browser can see a mobile 'simulated' view of the web application.
It has to happen when the user navigates to the page, not through installing chrome plugins etc
I see the ideal solution being something like an image of a generic mobile for when browsing on desktop, centred on the desktop screen, inside of which the web app view is rendered. Is there is plugin/tool that someone out there for this, I have done quite a bit of research and can only find information on emulators for testing etc. In a way all I am looking for is an image that dynamically resizes inside of which a view can be rendered, that looks well across many desktop screen sizes/resolutions etc. Rather than go about this myself (it would be a bit of a CSS learning curve for me) it would be great if something like this already existed.
An implementation like the above would free up real estate on the screen for other items like links and form buttons the client wants
Any direction on this would be greatly appreciated.

Materializecss mobile version

I'm using materializecss.com and angularjs for my website. The problem is quite interesting:
When i use Chrome and resize my website, everything stays responsive (not perfectly tough). But when i use the Chrome Emulation tool (with Apple iPhone 6) its not responsive anymore.
Have a look at the screenshots:
So you can see the different scale.
You can have a look at it at zencubes.io
Any ideas?
The description of your problem sounds like it's been answered here previously at Stackoverflow here, where it works in the device emulator in Chrome but not on the actual device itself.
Why CSS Media Query doesn't work on mobile device but yes on Google Chrome device emulator?
Have you checked your Viewport meta tag settings, in particular the width attribute?

AngularJS: Embedding Youtube videos in iframe does not work on Android Chrome

I'm developing a web application with AngularJS and I'm using a directive for embedding responsive Youtube videos called youtubeResponsive which allows to embed videos in an iframe with a video id as source parameter.
It all works perfectly on desktop browsers, in fact I also managed to embed a playlist and play it in a loop.
The problem I'm having is now on Chrome Android, on a Nexus 5 device (running Lollipop latest update) the video embedded is not showing and instead I can see a notification of a download going on. Every time I refresh I see the download process restarting but no video is showing. If I click on the download notification to see the file nothing happens.
Of course my aim is to display the video also on mobile with autoplay and loop active.
The output which I can see inspecting the page on mobile using USB debugging (chrome://inspect/#devices)
<iframe id="ytplayer" type="text/html" width="100%" height="202.5" ng-src="http://www.youtube.com/v/ZhfUv0spHCY?version=3&autoplay=1&loop=1&controls=0&showinfo=0&rel=0&wmode=opaque" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen="" video-slug="ZhfUv0spHCY" class="ng-isolate-scope" src="http://www.youtube.com/v/ZhfUv0spHCY?version=3&autoplay=1&loop=1&controls=0&showinfo=0&rel=0&wmode=opaque"></iframe>
I don't see any error on mobile except the same warning I can see on desktop which apparently is not blocking the video from playing at least there.
Resource interpreted as Document but transferred with MIME type application/x-shockwave-flash:
"https://www.youtube.com/v/ZhfUv0spHCY?version=3&autoplay=1&loop=1&controls=0&showinfo=0&rel=0&wmode=opaque".
Anyone experienced the same issue on Android Chrome or on other mobile devices and OS ?
I haven't started testing on AOSP or iOS yet but already on Chrome the issue is quite concerning. Let me know if anyone managed to fix it.
You're specifically requesting the old Flash player widget and not allowing it to upgrade to HTML5, which is required now for mobile support of any kind. You should switch to the YouTube Player API, which requires a few extra lines of code to implement but will work almost anywhere and give you a lot of event data back about videos playing, etc.
https://developers.google.com/youtube/iframe_api_reference
You can still use an IFRAME with this technique, although consider this directive which appears to support the current API:
https://github.com/brandly/angular-youtube-embed

How do I test a website design on a mobile device?

I have designed my site with a 900 x 600 fixed background image. On the computer it looks fine. How will it look on a PDA device? Will I have to design it separately for PDA?
How should check whether my site can be browsed effectively from mobile phone?
What should I do?
Try using Opera's "small screen" view (View > Small Screen). This does a pretty decent job of simulating a mobile screen. Try it on Opera's own site. Note that they use a "handheld" type stylesheet that kicks-in when you're viewing on a handheld or switch to small screen mode.
You can download Google's Android SDK for free to test on.
To test on iPhone, see the iPhone Tester. There's a button on the bottom-right to rotate the iPhone into its widescreen state.
The OpenWave Phone Simluator is supposed to be good.
You can try the mobi online emulator.
The Windows Mobile 5.0 SDK for Smartphone contains "Windows Mobile 5.0 based Smartphone Device Emulator images & skin files"
Finally, some general guidance: Web Content Accessibility and Mobile Web: Making a Web Site Accessible Both for People with Disabilities and for Mobile Devices
Instead of browser detection, you can supply alternative stylesheets for handheld devices. With
<link rel="stylesheet" href="small.css" type="text/css" media="handheld">
The advantage is that you only need one version of your site, the difference lies in the stylesheets. You need one additional css, while with browser detection you would need different versions of every page in your site. The downside is that not all browsers support the media attribute for stylesheets. But the most modern browsers do, and the support for it is growing.
If you are interested, I recommend having a look at an A List Apart article.
BTW, if you are not using css yet, switch to it immediately, no matter which solution for your problem you choose. CSS rocks!
You can also get device emulators for the Blackberry range of machines.
Well, you could always throw some detection javascript in there to check the type of browser, then redirect to a different site that is formatted for mobile devices. This seems to be the norm for most sites.
Examples:
Digg.com
Twitter.com
Google.com

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